And the old man was no slouch, either. The speed limit is 18 mph on the campus at Ole Miss in honor of Archie, whose number was retired after a spectacular college career that included finishing third (1970) and fourth (1969), respectively, in Heisman Trophy voting. The No. 2 overall pick of the New Orleans Saints in 1971, Archie scrambled his way around the NFL for 16 seasons.

3. Ken Norton/Ken Norton Jr.
Ken Sr. was a WBC heavyweight champion during boxing’s heyday, famously breaking Muhammad Ali’s jaw in 1973 — joining Joe Frazier as only the second fighter to beat Ali as a professional. Ken Jr. was a hard-hitting linebacker who became the first player in NFL history to win three consecutive Super Bowls, winning his first two with the Dallas Cowboys and his third with the San Francisco 49ers.

4. Lee Petty/Richard Petty
One of the founding fathers of stock car racing, Lee took the checkers at the inaugural Daytona 500 in 1959 and won three Cup championships. Following in his daddy’s burned-rubber tracks, Richard became (and remains to this day) “The King” of the sport, winning 200 races and seven Cup championships.

6. Dale Earnhardt/Dale Earnhardt Jr.
“The Intimidator,” Ralph Dale was a second-generation racer whose father, Ralph Lee, is a Hall of Famer in his own right. Behind his signature black shades and thick mustache, Dale Sr. scared the paint off every car on the track en route to seven Cup championships. Ralph Dale Jr. — “Little E,” “Dale Jr.” or just “Junior” — has been more sizzle than steak, but the reigning nine-time Most Popular Driver does have 18 Cup wins, two Busch Series titles, the 2004 Daytona 500 and a reported $300 million net worth to brag about.

7. Ken Griffey/Ken Griffey Jr.
In the ultimate father-son fantasy camp, Griffey and “The Kid” were teammates with the Seattle Mariners in 1990 and 1991, during George Kenneth Sr.’s 40 and 41-year-old seasons and George Kenneth Jr.’s 20 and 21-year-old campaigns, respectively. Junior embodied all that is right with baseball as a 13-time All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove center fielder and 1997 AL MVP — a year in which he hit a presumably clean .304 with 56 HR and 147 RBI. Now a father, Griffey Jr. has a son, Trey, playing football at Arizona.

8. Calvin Hill/Grant Hill
Calvin was a fraternity brother of George W. Bush at Yale who married a former roommate of Hillary Clinton. He also was a four-time Pro Bowl running back for the Dallas Cowboys as well as the Rookie of the Year in 1969. Meanwhile, Grant was a two-time NCAA champion at Duke before becoming NBA co-Rookie of the Year in 1995, a seven-time All-Star and a gold medalist in 1996.

9. Gordie Howe/Mark Howe
“Mr. Hockey” was a 23-time NHL All-Star, six-time Hart Memorial Trophy honoree, six-time scoring leader and four-time Stanley Cup champion. Equally impressive, he is the inspiration for the “Gordie Howe hat trick” — where a player records a goal, an assist and gets into a fight in the same game. Mark teamed with his dad as a rookie in 1973 until Gordie retired in 1980. He is a Hall of Famer who is currently the Director of Pro Scouting for the Detroit Red Wings.

10. Cecil Fielder/Prince Fielder
The only father-son duo in MLB history to each hit 50 HR in a single season. Cecil famously let preteen Prince take batting practice at Tiger Stadium, where the slugger now earns the $214 million deal he inked in the offseason.